LET-ETCENB206
Introduction to Middle English Literature
Course infoSchedule
Course moduleLET-ETCENB206
Credits (ECTS)5
Category-
Language of instructionEnglish
Offered byRadboud University; Faculty of Arts; English Language and Culture;
Lecturer(s)
Coordinator
dr. L.S. Chardonnens
Other course modules lecturer
Lecturer
dr. L.S. Chardonnens
Other course modules lecturer
Contactperson for the course
dr. L.S. Chardonnens
Other course modules lecturer
Examiner
dr. L.S. Chardonnens
Other course modules lecturer
Academic year2021
Period
PER 1-PER 3  (30/08/2021 to 10/04/2022)
Starting block
PER 1
Course mode
full-time
RemarksMajor aanschuifonderwijs
Registration using OSIRISYes
Course open to students from other facultiesYes
Pre-registrationNo
Waiting listNo
Placement procedure-
Aims
At the end of the course, the student
• has acquired a literary and historical overview of the Middle English period;
• has been introduced to a representative selection of authors and types of writings in the original Middle English;
• is able to recognise and analyse a range of genres, topics and ways of creating meaning prevalent in late medieval literary culture;
• is able to place Middle English writings in their cultural, historical, and material settings. 
Content
In addition to political, cultural and societal changes, the Conquest of England by the Normans in 1066 had a number of unforeseen effects in literary culture and linguistics, including the introduction of new literary genres up to then practically unknown to the English, and a brand new stage of the language, that is, Middle English. Through weekly readings, you will familiarise yourself with a broad range of writings from the beginning to the end of the Middle English period (ca. 1170­-ca. 1500). These texts are written in different mediums (prose/verse), modes (narrative/chronicle/history), genres (fabliau/allegory/lay/exemplum/romance), by different authors (anonymous/known/attributed). But whatever the texts may be, they have been written for two main purposes: sentence and solace, as Geoffrey Chaucer put it. Sentence means significance, more specifically the deeper meaning that is instilled in all human expressions. Solace means pleasure and refers to the enjoyment a narrative may give the listener or reader. Sentence and solace go hand in hand in every piece of writing, though not usually in equal measure. 


Test information
The final grade is the average mark of two written exams that each need to be passed with a 5.5 minimum. The written exams cover the lectures, the seminars, and the study materials.
Required materials
Book
Title:Medieval Writers and Their Work: Middle English Literature 1100–1500. (2nd ed)
Author:Burrow, J. A.
Publisher:Oxford: Oxford UP, 2008
Edition:2
Book
Title:Old and Middle English c. 890–c. 1450: An Anthology. (3rd ed)
Author:Treharne, Elaine, ed. and trans.
Publisher:Oxford: Blackwell, 2010
Edition:3
Reader
Title:A reader with questions and additional reading materials will be distributed during the course.

Instructional modes
AT HOME PER 3 gel 2
Attendance MandatoryYes

At-home PER2 gel1
Attendance MandatoryYes

At-home PER2 gel2
Attendance MandatoryYes

Lecture

Seminar

Tests
Exam
Test weight50
Test typeWritten exam
OpportunitiesBlock PER 1, Block PER 2

Minimum grade
5,5

Take home exam
Test weight50
Test typeWritten exam
OpportunitiesBlock PER 2, Block PER 3

Minimum grade
5,5